Drafts and sandbice
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Country | United States |
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State | California |
City | Martinez |
Coordinates | 38°00′47″N 122°06′21″W / 38.01315°N 122.1058°W |
Refinery details | |
Operator | Martinez Refining Company |
Owner(s) |
Royal Dutch Shell (1915–2020) PBF Energy (2020–) |
Commissioned | 1915 |
Capacity | 157,000 [1] bbl/d (25,000 m3/d) |
It refines stuff.
Founded in 1915. [2] [3] [4] Was Shell's first US refinery. [3] The terminal was built in 1913 by the American Gasoline Company. [3] Address is 3485 Pacheco Blvd, Martinez, Ca, 94553. [3] In 2020 it was Shell's only refinery in California. [5]
Spilled 400,000 gallons of crude oil into the Carquinez Strait in 1988. [2] Part of a "handful" of environmental incidents. [2] In March 2019, Shell paid 165k to settle 16 air violations between 2015 and 2016. [4] In December 2016 they flared off almost 20 tons. [4] 73 flares between 2005 and 2018. [4] Pump fire in process unit on June 7 2019, workers evacuated. [4]
Gasoline is 85% of production. [3] Also makes "asphalt, diesel, jet turbine fuel, petroleum coke, propane, residual fuel oils, and sulfur". [3] [4] [6] In 2017 "the refinery has enjoyed a generally positive relationship with the city of Martinez over the years". [6]
Shell had been trying to sell it since 2016. [2] In 2021, Mercury News said that it would be affected by new rules (what are they?). [7] The costs would be "approximately 0.62% of estimated annually revenue". [7] PBF suggested $40 million project that would bring down particulate emissions. [8] It was PBF's second refinery on the West Coast. [5]
Located on 860-acre site. [1] [9] 157,000 barrels per day. [1] [5] Dual-coking refinery and integrated logistics. [1] Royal Dutch Shell PLC's subsidiary ( Equilon Enterprises, doing business as Shell Oil Products US) sold to PBF Energy. [1] PBF owns it, the Martinez Refining Co. LLC (who they own) operates it. [2] They were "in talks" in 2017. [6] Sale completed in February 2020, [9] for $1.2 billion. [1] [10] [11] [12] Cost of assets was $960.0 million, plus the value of the inventory. [9] Part of global downstream divestment from Shell. [1] Plans made to (more stuff about Shell's plans afterward, etc). [1] "Martinez’s on-site logistics assets, including a deep-water marine terminal, product distribution terminals, and refinery crude and product storage installations with about 8.8 million bbl of shell capacity." [1] [11] "adjacent truck rack and terminal". [10] Has a Nelson complexity index of 16.1 ("one of the most complex refineries in the United States"). [9] [11] [5] Proposed renewable diesel thingy with idled equipment. [10] [11] [5]
According to Dun & Bradstreet, annual revenue is 147.65 million. [3]
In 2019, Shell employed over 700 people at the site. [4] These employees were to be offered jobs at PBF when it took over. [4]
The freaking goddamn coronavirus happened in 2020. PBF said their refineries running at 30% capacity. [4] They sold five of the hydrogen plants nationwide, for a total of $530 mil. [13] Two of them were at the Martinez facility. [4] There are three hydrogen plants there, one had been owned by Air Products since 1996. [4] They separate the sulfur from the other shit. [4] They're steam methane reformer hydrogen production plants. [14]
In June 2021, PBF said that if new regulations went through, the Martinez plant would go kaput. [15] This was to do with fluidized catalytic cracking units (more info in source). [15]
Malfunctions in July 2018, health advisory issued in Martinez and Pacheco. [16] [17] Flaring incident July 6, fire at compressor unit, >100 lb of hydrogen sulfide. [17] "five refinery problems over four days", >8500 lbs of gas. Lot of shit in this source. [17]
Shit got slow during the freaking coronavirus. Throughput at 30% below expectations in April 2020. Transitioned to idle operating status. [14]
Flaring incident in December 2016, "thousands of pounds of toxic gas" released. Caused by power outage. Decades-old substation. 39,000# of light hydrocarbons and hydrogen sulfide sent to flares on December 19 2016. [18] [19]
More stuff here. [19]
And here. [20]
Drafts and sandbice
|
---|
|
Country | United States |
---|---|
State | California |
City | Martinez |
Coordinates | 38°00′47″N 122°06′21″W / 38.01315°N 122.1058°W |
Refinery details | |
Operator | Martinez Refining Company |
Owner(s) |
Royal Dutch Shell (1915–2020) PBF Energy (2020–) |
Commissioned | 1915 |
Capacity | 157,000 [1] bbl/d (25,000 m3/d) |
It refines stuff.
Founded in 1915. [2] [3] [4] Was Shell's first US refinery. [3] The terminal was built in 1913 by the American Gasoline Company. [3] Address is 3485 Pacheco Blvd, Martinez, Ca, 94553. [3] In 2020 it was Shell's only refinery in California. [5]
Spilled 400,000 gallons of crude oil into the Carquinez Strait in 1988. [2] Part of a "handful" of environmental incidents. [2] In March 2019, Shell paid 165k to settle 16 air violations between 2015 and 2016. [4] In December 2016 they flared off almost 20 tons. [4] 73 flares between 2005 and 2018. [4] Pump fire in process unit on June 7 2019, workers evacuated. [4]
Gasoline is 85% of production. [3] Also makes "asphalt, diesel, jet turbine fuel, petroleum coke, propane, residual fuel oils, and sulfur". [3] [4] [6] In 2017 "the refinery has enjoyed a generally positive relationship with the city of Martinez over the years". [6]
Shell had been trying to sell it since 2016. [2] In 2021, Mercury News said that it would be affected by new rules (what are they?). [7] The costs would be "approximately 0.62% of estimated annually revenue". [7] PBF suggested $40 million project that would bring down particulate emissions. [8] It was PBF's second refinery on the West Coast. [5]
Located on 860-acre site. [1] [9] 157,000 barrels per day. [1] [5] Dual-coking refinery and integrated logistics. [1] Royal Dutch Shell PLC's subsidiary ( Equilon Enterprises, doing business as Shell Oil Products US) sold to PBF Energy. [1] PBF owns it, the Martinez Refining Co. LLC (who they own) operates it. [2] They were "in talks" in 2017. [6] Sale completed in February 2020, [9] for $1.2 billion. [1] [10] [11] [12] Cost of assets was $960.0 million, plus the value of the inventory. [9] Part of global downstream divestment from Shell. [1] Plans made to (more stuff about Shell's plans afterward, etc). [1] "Martinez’s on-site logistics assets, including a deep-water marine terminal, product distribution terminals, and refinery crude and product storage installations with about 8.8 million bbl of shell capacity." [1] [11] "adjacent truck rack and terminal". [10] Has a Nelson complexity index of 16.1 ("one of the most complex refineries in the United States"). [9] [11] [5] Proposed renewable diesel thingy with idled equipment. [10] [11] [5]
According to Dun & Bradstreet, annual revenue is 147.65 million. [3]
In 2019, Shell employed over 700 people at the site. [4] These employees were to be offered jobs at PBF when it took over. [4]
The freaking goddamn coronavirus happened in 2020. PBF said their refineries running at 30% capacity. [4] They sold five of the hydrogen plants nationwide, for a total of $530 mil. [13] Two of them were at the Martinez facility. [4] There are three hydrogen plants there, one had been owned by Air Products since 1996. [4] They separate the sulfur from the other shit. [4] They're steam methane reformer hydrogen production plants. [14]
In June 2021, PBF said that if new regulations went through, the Martinez plant would go kaput. [15] This was to do with fluidized catalytic cracking units (more info in source). [15]
Malfunctions in July 2018, health advisory issued in Martinez and Pacheco. [16] [17] Flaring incident July 6, fire at compressor unit, >100 lb of hydrogen sulfide. [17] "five refinery problems over four days", >8500 lbs of gas. Lot of shit in this source. [17]
Shit got slow during the freaking coronavirus. Throughput at 30% below expectations in April 2020. Transitioned to idle operating status. [14]
Flaring incident in December 2016, "thousands of pounds of toxic gas" released. Caused by power outage. Decades-old substation. 39,000# of light hydrocarbons and hydrogen sulfide sent to flares on December 19 2016. [18] [19]
More stuff here. [19]
And here. [20]